Kevin McHale says Larry Bird would dominate today's NBA, too - Globe

26 views
Skip to first unread message

JB

unread,
Jun 4, 2026, 7:29:02 AMJun 4
to Celtics stuff

Kevin McHale on how Larry Bird would dominate today’s NBA: ‘It’d be a five-alarm fire what Larry would do’

By Adam Himmelsbach Globe Staff,Updated June 4, 2026, 1 hour ago
BGVKRXMAHVGUBJ5WDIBWDDWBQQ.avif

david Pontrelli

unread,
Jun 4, 2026, 7:55:05 AMJun 4
to celtic...@googlegroups.com
One important fact to consider is if Larry played his career today, he'd probably be a bit taller, more muscular, wear better shoes, spent only 1 year of college instead of 5 before joining the NBA, and reap benefits of better nutrition, training etc. Ive no doubt Larry as he was, would dominate today. Imagine if he was on a level playing field?

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Celticsstuff" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to celticsstuff...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/celticsstuff/DDA49343-12A2-4980-A02E-E21F74335B1D%40gmail.com.
Larry Bird was a 12-time All-Star, three-time MVP, and three-time NBA champion with the Celtics from 1979-92.O'Brien, Frank Globe Photo/The Boston Globe

Shaking my notebook up and down and seeing what falls out as many Celtics fans become honorary Spurs supporters as San Antonio takes on the Knicks in the Finals …

⋅ It seems that just about every former NBA player has a podcast or microphone of some sort these days. And when 22-year-old French superstars are not preparing to play in the NBA Finals at Madison Square Garden, it can be tough to find something to get fired up about. But the comparison of eras might provide the most reliable fodder.

It’s impossible to know how Wilt Chamberlain would fare today, or what damage LeBron James would have inflicted on opponents in the 1950s. But Hall of Famer and former Celtics star Kevin McHale, for one, bristles whenever he hears a current player question whether Larry Bird would be a superstar in 2026.

“These are the same dudes that can’t guard [Lakers star] Luka Doncic, and Luka Doncic is lighting them up,” McHale said with a sigh during a recent phone call. “And I’m thinking, ‘Larry is bigger, stronger, faster, and meaner than Luka Doncic. And if Luka is lighting these dudes up, it’d be a five-alarm fire what Larry would do.’ ”

Bird was a 12-time All-Star, three-time MVP, and three-time NBA champion with the Celtics from 1979-92, even while dealing with injuries throughout his career. McHale said that with sports science advances, Bird would have the tools and support to dominate today’s game, too.

“I just laugh at these people today,” he said. “Larry would go by you a hell of a lot faster than Luka would go by you. He was a straight-line driver, and he was also just a horse.”

⋅ The Celtics own the 27th and 40th picks in the NBA Draft, which begins June 23. And one league source said that the talent pool in that range might be slightly watered down because players now have another very good option. The proliferation of NIL money has made it more lucrative for many prospects to remain in college rather than becoming a second-round pick, or in some cases even a late first-round choice.

If the structure remains unchanged, this process will eventually even out as the players who remained in school exhaust their eligibility and end up in the draft. But for now, there is a gap. Still, the source stressed, there will be enough talent to find useful pieces.

⋅ I recently spoke with Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla’s high school coach, Jamal Gomes, about his former pupil’s looming NBA Coach of the Year honor.

Gomes, who still coaches at Bishop Hendricken in Warwick, R.I., said it was obvious that Mazzulla had the mind of a coach. But he also stressed that he had an unusual competitive fire.

“That kid was a winner back when he was 11, 12, 13 years old,” Gomes said. “And what made Joe a winner was he was a fierce, fierce competitor. When the lights came on, you always knew what you were going to get out of Joe, and that was starting back in middle school.”

⋅ President of basketball operations Brad Stevens’s comments about rookie guard Hugo Gonzalez at his end-of-season news conference were a bit lost in the shuffle, but they felt notable.

“The reality is Hugo has had a great rookie year, and I think is a critical part of us moving forward because his athleticism can meet the moment in the big games,” Stevens said. “That’s a real thing. You can see it, you know it. His strength is off the charts. He’s probably the strongest … he’s one of the strongest guys on our team, pound for pound, right now as a 20-year-old, so he’s got a bright future.”

Stevens added that Gonzalez was not part of the playoff rotation because he did not separate himself from the others, but the team believes he is an integral part of the future.

⋅ Former Celtics center Luke Kornet had one of the biggest plays of these playoffs when he chased down Thunder big man Isaiah Hartenstein for a block with the Spurs clinging to a 6-point lead midway through the fourth quarter of Game 7 of the Western Conference finals Saturday.

Luke Kornet's block of Isaiah Hartenstein in the fourth quarter helped the Spurs beat the Thunder in Game 7 of the Western Conference finals.Luke Kornet's block of Isaiah Hartenstein in the fourth quarter helped the Spurs beat the Thunder in Game 7 of the Western Conference finals.Nate Billings/AP Photo/Nate Billings

Kornet, who signed a four-year, $41 million deal with San Antonio last summer, became an essential piece while backing up rising superstar Victor Wembanyama. Kornet averaged 6.5 points and 6.1 rebounds while playing a career-high 21 minutes per game.

He helped the Celtics win the 2023-24 NBA title, of course. But former Celtics first-round pick Kelly Olynyk, a Spurs backup who is somehow now 35, could soon win his first ring.

Former Rhode Island star Jimmy Baron is an assistant coach for the Spurs. The Knicks have local ties on the bench, too. Assistant coach Darren Erman had two stints as a Celtics assistant and was coach of the team’s G League affiliate in Maine during the 2019-20 season. And Knicks assistant Rick Brunson, the father of superstar point guard Jalen Brunson, was a standout guard at Salem (Mass.) High before playing for Temple.

⋅ The Celtics’ Andy Mannix was named the NBA Equipment Managers Association’s co-equipment manager of the year, along with Curtis Andrade of the Raptors. Mannix has been with the franchise for 28 years, serving as a ball boy, facilities manager, and assistant equipment manager, before taking on his current role. This is his first time winning this honor.

“Guess I was due,” he quipped.


Adam Himmelsbach can be reached at adam.him...@globe.com. Follow him @adamhimmelsbach.



Find this and other fine articles at the above link.





--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Celticsstuff" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to celticsstuff...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/celticsstuff/DDA49343-12A2-4980-A02E-E21F74335B1D%40gmail.com.

NCC

unread,
Jun 4, 2026, 8:07:21 AMJun 4
to celtic...@googlegroups.com
 
"spent only 1 year of college instead of 5 before joining the NBA,"
 
I'm not so sure about this.

david Pontrelli

unread,
Jun 4, 2026, 8:22:51 AMJun 4
to celtic...@googlegroups.com
4 more years of NBA experience, as opposed to being a 23 year old rookie? He'd have had 4 more years of stats on his resume. Im leveling the field. 

NCC

unread,
Jun 4, 2026, 9:37:04 AMJun 4
to celtic...@googlegroups.com
 
Bird showed considerable loyalty to Indiana State.  He returned his last year even though he had been picked 6th in the NBA draft, and could gone higher if he was giving up his last year of college eligibility.
 
I don't assume he'd have the same values as a lot of kids today have.

Vinny Natale

unread,
Jun 4, 2026, 9:42:54 AMJun 4
to Celticsstuff
50 years ago he was brought up in a different culture than which exists today. 

david Pontrelli

unread,
Jun 4, 2026, 9:44:25 AMJun 4
to celtic...@googlegroups.com
But thats my point. Take a man out of his era and add 35 odd years of added development before his moving to a similar era. Ditto for putting one back 50 years ago. You have to remove 50 years of evolution between biology and the game itself.

david Pontrelli

unread,
Jun 4, 2026, 9:45:51 AMJun 4
to celtic...@googlegroups.com
Yes, but if you want to bring him into 2026, all that changes. If you doubt that, than comparing him with today's game is moot.

Jack Jemsek

unread,
Jun 4, 2026, 5:31:50 PMJun 4
to celtic...@googlegroups.com
Larry Bird's unique skillset still hasn't been matched by modern players. Bird remains the only player to ever make an All-Defense Team (3x) and also shoot 50/40/90 for a season (2x).

Bird is the best shooting player that also used energy to be elite on defense. From 1984-1988 over 4 seasons his shooting splits are 51/41/90 on 21FGA per game which would be the 2nd highest amount of FGA's in Steph Curry's career (Bird shot the ball a ton). His counting stats during that span are 28/10/7 with 2 blocks 1 steal on 39MPG.

So you basically have a 6'9 Steph Curry with Jokic passing vision and PJ Tucker/Marcus Smart style of elite defense. No wonder he was such a nightmare for everyone.

It also makes no sense that a 6'9 power forward who grew up in the 60s and 70s without a 3 point line was able to be this deadly of a shooter from all over the court.

Bird was the first person to ever shoot 50-40-90. But he was also an elite player in all other aspects of the game which seems to set him apart of all other super stars who have some gap in their game from passing to shooting to defense. Jordan is the GOAT, and Curry is the GOAT Shooter, Lebron is the accolades GOAT. But Bird is the most complete player of all time. And while players keep evolving and getting better and better every year it seems like, no one has yet to match the unique elite skill set of Larry Bird. 

Written by: GoatmontWaters 
#celticsnation
https://www.facebook.com/share/18wWZeYijt/?mibextid=wwXIfr  


david Pontrelli

unread,
Jun 4, 2026, 6:28:41 PMJun 4
to celtic...@googlegroups.com
No argument here. Naismith award, ROY, NBA MVP 3 straight years, All Star MVP, NBA championship MVP,  COY and Executive of the year. Not bad at all.

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages